In Media: Opinion — Everyone Can Help Make Clean Beaches a Reality
Marine Debris - News


This year's campaign, run by the Connecticut and New York Sea Grant programs with support from the Long Island Sound Study, consists of cleanup events in both states, social media posts and giveaways of "Protect Our Wildlife" stickers for reusable water bottles and travel mugs. The theme, #DoOneThing, encourages people to take at least one action to reduce litter on streets, parks and beaches before it gets carried into waterways and ultimately Long Island Sound. Social media posts emphasize positive steps people are taking to address the problem.

By Judy Benson (Connecticut Sea Grant Communications Coordinator) for Shelton Herald

Avery Point, CT, August 13, 2021 - Nobody likes a nag.

With that in mind, this year’s #DontTrashLISound campaign isn’t going to be harping so much on the ubiquitous litter problem as on solutions — big, small and in-between. Every action people take builds momentum and positive peer pressure for friends and neighbors to join in keeping clean our communities and our most important waterway — Long Island Sound.

This year the campaign is led by the Connecticut and New York Sea Grant programs with support from the Long Island Sound Study. Partners include Save the Sound and the Maritime Aquarium of Norwalk. Consisting of social media posts, “Protect Our Wildlife” sticker giveaways and cleanup events, the campaign will run from Aug. 16 through International Coastal Cleanup Day on Sept. 18. The first cleanup will take place on Aug. 16 at Sherwood Island State Park in Westport, with volunteers from CT Sea Grant, the Maritime Aquarium, Save the Sound and other groups.

Now in its fifth year, the campaign this year is asking people to “#DoOneThing” to reduce trash in our streets, parks, beaches and everywhere else. That could be picking up one piece of trash every time you go for a walk, or volunteering for a group cleanup event. It could be resolving to stop using one throwaway plastic item, like stirrers or straws. Or you could choose unwrapped produce over fresh fruits and vegetables in plastic packaging and bring cloth mesh bags to the store for loose produce.

The campaign is also calling attention to some of the role models.

Among them are students in the Coastal Cleanup Crew at Staples High School in Westport, and a similar student-led group at Wilbur Cross High in New Haven. At Project Oceanology in Groton, summer campers routinely pick up trash as part of their visits to South Dumpling Island, getting a hands-on lesson in how careless actions by people miles away end up harming a fragile, uninhabited environment when their trash finds its way there.

“This is a great way for youth to have a tangible impact, and it’s a way of showing up for the cause,” said Anthony Allen, assistant director of ecological restoration at Save the Sound, which is running its own #TrashTravels campaign in tandem with #DontTrashLISound. “But it’s also a way of getting students involved in leadership and organizing.”

Over the next two months, cleanups will be taking place at beaches, parks and along rivers throughout the state, led by land trusts, environmental groups and individuals. At one cleanup last year at Rocky Neck State Park in Niantic, the 25 people who registered in advance were joined by about 60 others who showed up that day. Among them were about 20 who signed up spontaneously. They came for a day at the beach but became inspired to pick up gloves and a trash bag when they saw the others removing cigarette butts and food wrappers not just off the sand, but also from the parking lots and upland areas.

“It was such an incredible event. We had kids as young as 3, 4 and 5 putting on gloves and picking up trash with their parents, and many older folks,” said Michiela Messner of Middlefield, organizer and high school physical education and health teacher in North Haven. “It was a chain reaction.”

That kind of demonstration isn’t just needed along the coast. Inland communities are being encouraged to step up their efforts, too.

“Water connects all life, and it also has a way of transporting our trash,” Allen said.

This year’s campaign comes as the Marine Debris Action Plan for Long Island Sound begins to take shape. Connecticut and New York Sea Grant programs are leading the effort, joined by nearly two dozen partner organizations, to develop a comprehensive approach to eliminating the many kinds of trash in the estuary — from abandoned lobster traps to plastic water bottles, tiny shards of microplastic to fishing line and balloons. Funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the action plan will serve as a guide to connect the energies of the many groups involved in different aspects of the problem — from research to monitoring to policy and behavior change initiatives — into a coordinated strategy towards a world as trash-free as possible.

“Campaigns like this one help keep people aware of the larger marine debris problem affecting Long Island Sound,” said Nancy Balcom, associate director of Connecticut Sea Grant and one of the leaders of the Marine Debris Action Plan effort. “They also help people focus on doable actions that we can all undertake with as much or as little effort as we have time to commit.”

When it comes to tackling the litter problem, we can all #DoOneThing. Maybe the best place to start is to begin paying attention and let that lead to caring and action.


“Turn your trash eyes on. Where are you seeing trash? Start letting it enter your consciousness,” Allen said. “Allowing that noticing to happen can be really powerful.”

For information on cleanup events, visit: www.savethesound.org/2021cleanup 


Judy Benson is the communications coordinator for Connecticut Sea Grant, based at UConn’s Avery Point campus. For information on the #DontTrashLISound campaign and how to obtain “Protect Our Wildlife” stickers, email her at: judy.benson@uconn.edu.


More Info: Long Island Sound Study

Long Island Sound is one of the 28 nationally designated estuaries under the National Estuary Program (NEP), which was established by Congress in 1987 to improve the quality of Long Island Sound and other places where rivers meet the sea. 

The Long Island Sound Study is a cooperative effort involving researchers, regulators, user groups and other concerned organizations and individuals, and is led by the Environmental Protection Agency and the states of New York and Connecticut. 

In recent years, LISS has experienced a period of rapid expansion attributed to the increased federal funding for the program, and to implement actions, objectives, and goals established under a Comprehensive Conservation and Management Plan. The increase is grounded in the CCMP’s four overarching themes: Clean Waters and Healthy Watersheds, Thriving Habitats and Abundant Wildlife, Sustainable and Resilient Communities, and Sound Science and Inclusive Management.  Resilience to climate change, long-term sustainability, and environmental justice, are principles that connect to all four of the themes.


For more on what you can do to make a difference, click over to the "Get Involved" or "Stewardship" sections of the Long Island Sound Study's website. News on the Long Island Sound Study can also be found in New York Sea Grant's related archives.

If you would like to receive Long Island Sound Study's newsletter, please visit their site's homepage and sign up for the "e-news/print newsletter" under the "Stay Connected" box.


More Info: New York Sea Grant

New York Sea Grant (NYSG), a cooperative program of Cornell University and the State University of New York (SUNY), is one of 34 university-based programs under the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Sea Grant College Program.

Since 1971, NYSG has represented a statewide network of integrated research, education and extension services promoting coastal community economic vitality, environmental sustainability and citizen awareness and understanding about the State’s marine and Great Lakes resources.

Through NYSG’s efforts, the combined talents of university scientists and extension specialists help develop and transfer science-based information to many coastal user groups—businesses and industries, federal, state and local government decision-makers and agency managers, educators, the media and the interested public.

The program maintains Great Lakes offices at Cornell University, SUNY Buffalo, SUNY Oswego and the Wayne County Cooperative Extension office in Newark. In the State's marine waters, NYSG has offices at Stony Brook University in Long Island, Brooklyn College and Cornell Cooperative Extension in NYC and Kingston in the Hudson Valley.

For updates on Sea Grant activities: www.nyseagrant.org has RSS, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube links. NYSG offers a free e-list sign up via www.nyseagrant.org/nycoastlines for its flagship publication, NY Coastlines/Currents, which is published quarterly.

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